MemoryContextAllocZero back to MemoryContextAlloc, same as it was in 7.4.
The zeroing is unnecessary since all the meaningful fields are filled in
just below. I had made it do that out of neatnik-ism, but some testing
with an example provided by Pavel Stehule showed that the zeroing was
accounting for about 5% of the runtime in a compute-intensive plpgsql
function. That seems a bit high of a price for neatnik-ism...
got it wrong when the JOIN was in an outer query level. Per example from
Laurie Burrow. Also fix same issue in markTargetListOrigin. I think the
latter is only a latent bug since we currently don't apply markTargetListOrigin
except at the outer level ... but should do it right anyway.
CASE 'a' WHEN 'a' THEN 1 ELSE 2 END. This worked in 7.4 and before
but had been broken due to premature freezing of the type of the test
expression. Per gripe from GÄbor SzÃcs.
few 'listen_addresses' as possible --- on most systems, none at all,
just the Unix socket. This avoids spurious check failures due to bogus
DNS setups, and is probably a good idea from a security standpoint anyway.
Per trouble report from Jean-GÅrard Pailloncy.
so that we can get the size of a shared inval message back down to what it
was in 7.4 (and simplify the logic too). Phase 2 of fixing the
'SMgrRelation hashtable corrupted' problem.
is the minimum required fix. I want to look next at taking advantage of
it by simplifying the message semantics in the shared inval message queue,
but that part can be held over for 8.1 if it turns out too ugly.
releases, a nonzero 'c' argument meant that the input string could be
terminated by either that character or \0. Recent refactoring broke
that, causing the thing to scan for 'c' only. This went undetected
because no part of the main code actually passes nonzero 'c'. However
it broke tsearch2 and possibly other user-written code that assumed
the old definition. Per report from Tom Hebbron.
request packet, use pqReadData(). This has the same effect since
conn->ssl isn't set yet and we aren't expecting more than one byte.
The advantage is that we will correctly detect loss-of-connection
instead of going into an infinite loop. Per report from Hannu Krosing.
discussion on pgsql-hackers-win32 list. Documentation still needs to
be tweaked --- I'm not sure how to refer to the APPDATA folder in
user documentation.
consistent. On Unix we now always consult getpwuid(); $HOME isn't used
at all. On Windows the code currently consults $USERPROFILE, or $HOME
if that's not defined, but I expect this will change as soon as the win32
hackers come to a consensus. Nothing done yet about changing the file
names used underneath $USERPROFILE.
subroutine that can hide platform dependencies. The WIN32 path is still
a stub, but I await a fix from one of the win32 hackers.
Also clean up unnecessary #ifdef WIN32 ugliness in a couple of places.
share lock on a buffer being written out before releasing BufMgrLock in
the BufferAlloc code path; if we do it later we might block on someone
who's re-pinned the buffer. I believe this is only an issue for BufferAlloc
and not the other places that call FlushBuffer. BufferSync must continue
to do it the old way since it may well be trying to write buffers that
other backends have pinned; but it should not be holding any conflicting
locks. FlushRelationBuffers is okay since it's got exclusive lock at the
relation level.